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Transcript
David trained as a dancer, first in his hometown of Chatham, Ontario and then at the
National Ballet School of Canada. It was during his time there that he first became interested
in choreography, helping to revive a choreographic workshop with the approval of school
director Betty Oliphant. After further training in Europe he returned to Canada to train with
Erik Bruhn and the great Russian teacher, Eugene Valukin.
David's career began at the National Ballet of Canada where he progressed rapidly through
the ranks to become a Principal Dancer, dancing lead roles in the classical and
contemporary repertoire. In 1985 he joined the Deutsche Oper Ballet in Berlin as Principal
Dancer where he won the Critics' Award for Best Male Performance (1987) and continued to
increase his own choreographic output. This included producing and directing a successful
mixed programme, David Nixon's Liaisons, at the Hebbel Theatre, Berlin in 1990.
David left Berlin for a series of principal guest artist positions with National Ballet of Canada,
Bayerisches Staatsballett, Munich and Royal Winnipeg Ballet before returning to Deutsche
Oper Ballet in 1994 as First Ballet Master. His guest artist credits also include Birmingham
Royal Ballet; Komische Oper; Deutsche Staatsoper; Hamburg Ballet and Sydney City Ballet.
In 1994 David became Artistic Director of BalletMet in Columbus, Ohio USA. During his six
years with the Company he added 16 world and 15 company premières to the repertoire.
Companies in Canada, the USA and South Africa have since staged David's productions.
Recently he has reproduced The Nutcracker in Slovenia, The Three Musketeers in Tallin,
Estonia and Dangerous Liaisons in Ohio.
In 2001 David became Artistic Director of Northern Ballet and has since added an
impressive array of new works to the repertoire including the hugely popular Madame
Butterfly, Wuthering Heights, the Gershwin extravaganza, I Got Rhythm, Swan Lake, A
Midsummer Night's Dream, Peter Pan, Dracula, The Three Musketeers, A Sleeping Beauty
Tale, The Nutcracker, Hamlet, Cleopatra, Beauty & the Beast, The Great Gatsby and most
recently Cinderella.
His work has received recognition: A Midsummer Night's Dream and The Three Musketeers
were nominated for an Olivier award; The Three Musketeers won a Manchester Evening
News (MEN) Theatre Award and Madame Butterfly and A Midsummer Night's Dream were
nominated for a MEN Award. David was voted Director of the Year by readers of Dance
Europe in 2003 and 2006; and Northern Ballet received the audience award at the Critics'
Circle National Dance Awards for three successive years (2004, 2005, 2006), and the
Patron's Award in 2009.
In January 2010 David was awarded an OBE for his services to dance in the Queen's New
Years Honours list.
Patricia has worked extensively with Northern Ballet, beginning as drama consultant and
acting coach on Christopher Gable’s Dracula, continuing with him and Michael Pink
on Giselle and The Hunchback of Notre Dame. She then directed Northern
Ballet’s Carmen and A Streetcar Named Desire, both choreographed by Didy Veldman. Her
collaboration with David Nixon began on Wuthering Heights and Swan Lake and continued
with Patricia co-directing and creating the scenarios with David for the company’s new
versions of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and Peter Pan. Patricia also co-wrote the scenario
for David Nixon’s A Sleeping Beauty Tale, which was performed as part of Northern Ballet’s
Spring/Summer tour in 2007. As well as co-directing Hamlet Patricia also prepared
the scenario alongside David Nixon. Patricia also teaches and lectures on British Theatre for
American Universities and directs courses at the Actors’ Centre in London and Central
School of Ballet. She also assesses students at leading drama schools.
Born: Hertfordshire
Trained: RADA
Previous Companies:
As an Actress: Patricia has worked in many of the major repertory companies in Britain; at
the Royal Court, the National Theatre and with the Royal Shakespeare Company. Founding
member of the GeVa Theatre, Rochester, NY as well as television, radio and film work.
As a Director: Work includes: Martine, Salisbury Playhouse; Time and the
Conways and Noises Off, Ohio, USA; Three Sisters, Great Expectations, Wuthering
Heights and Travesties, Manchester Metropolitan University School of Theatre; Puss in
Boots and Little Red Riding Hood, Theatre, Chipping Norton; Blue Remembered Hills, A
Clergyman’s Daughter, andBloody Poetry with her own company Terra Firma, in London and
touring. She has also worked with Central School of Ballet, the National Youth Theatre, and
has been involved in the training of students at major Drama Schools as well as working with
young offenders for the Prince’s Trust. Patricia also directs courses at the Actors Centre in
London and was Rehearsal Director for the children in the Hollywood film Anna and the
King starring Jodie Foster.
Career Highlights:
As an Actress: The world tour of Peter Brook’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream for the Royal
Shakespeare Company, Amanda in Noel Coward’s Private Lives, Emma in Harold
Pinter’s Betrayal, Hester in Terence Rattigan’s The Deep Blue Sea, Sheila in Peter
Nichol’s A Day in the Death of Joe Egg, Jo in Shelagh Delaney’s A Taste of Honey,
Pinocchio and Hedda Gabler.
As a Director: Martine, Blue Remembered Hills, A Clergyman’s Daughter, Wuthering
Heights, Three Sisters, Time and the Conways, A Doll’s House, Serious Money, Barnaby
Rudge, and productions with Northern Ballet.
Born in Paris in 1964, Jérôme studied Scenography at L’Ecole de la Rue Blanche and after
graduating in 1987 began working extensively designing sets and costumes for theatre and
opera.
In 1992 he collaborated with the Ballets de Monte Carlo for the first time on L’Enfant et les
sortilèges and has since designed sets and costumes for their productions of Romeo and
Juliet, Cinderella, Casse-Noisette Circus, Eye for Eye and Scheherazade.
In 2001, Jérôme became the first French scenographer to be invited to work with the
National Ballet of China in Beijing where he created costumes for Raise the Red
Lantern staged by the director Zhang Yimou.
Jérôme has worked extensively with Bertrand d’At and his recent work also includes: The
Prince of Pagodas, Opera of Strasbourg, In the Mood for Love, Ballet of Shanghai, with
Karine Sporta, Feu le Music Hall, Comédie-Française and In the Night Look, Opera of Cairo.
He has also worked with David Nixon OBE on Northern Ballet’s Ondine, A Sleeping Beauty
Tale and The Great Gatsby. Other recent ballet work includes: Christopher Wheeldon’s The
Sleeping Beauty, with Ib Andersen on Kermesse in Bruges for the Royal Ballet of Denmark
and with Nacho Duato on The Nutcracker for the Mikhailovsky Ballet in Saint Petersburg.
Since 2010 Jérôme has worked with Alexei Ratmansky creating sets and costumes for Don
Quixote for the Dutch National Ballet, the world premiére of Lost Illusions for the Bolshoi in
Moscow, for which he won a Golden Mask Award in 2012 for costume design,
and Cinderella for the Australian Ballet in Melbourne.
Tim has previously lit Hamlet and Dracula for Northern Ballet and other dance and opera
credits include Die Fledermaus (WNO); Die Frau Ohne Schatten, Elektra (Mariinsky Theatr,
Russiae); Ariadne Auf Naxos (Boston); The Marriage of Figaro, Requiem Ballet, Don
Giovanni (Kammeroper); Carmen Negra (Icelandic Opera); The Snowman (Korea/Sadler’s
Wells/Tour) and The Lady and The Fool (BRB).
His recent theatre credits include Racing Demon, An Enemy of the People (Sheffield
Crucible); The Three Musketeers (Rose Theatre); Lend Me A Tenor (Plymouth); Tell Me on
A Sunday (Tour); Master Class (Theatre Royal Bath); The Critic / Real Inspector Hound,
Bingo, The Master Builder, Oklahoma, The Grapes of Wrath, Cyrano De Bergerac
(Chichester Festival Theatre, for whom he is an associate); The Secret Garden (Edinburgh
Festival Theatre / Toronto); The Cherry Orchard, Arthur and George (Birmingham Rep);
Dirty Dancing (West End/ Toronto/ Hamburg/ Utrecht/ USA tour/ Berlin); The History Boys
(Tour/WYP); Alphabetical Order (also tour), Darker Shores, Amongst Friends (Hampstead);
A Month in the Country (Salisbury Playhouse); Cinderella (Old Vic); Sleeping Beauty (New
York/Barbican/Young Vic); Henry IV Parts I & II (Washington Shakespeare); The Play What I
Wrote (Broadway/West End); Merrily We Roll Along (Donmar); Hamlet (Japan/Sadler’s
Wells); Yes, Prime Minister, Toyer, Imagine This, Bad Girls The Musical, Otherwise
Engaged, As You Like It, Romeo and Juliet, Of Mice and Men (West End); Becky Shaw, The
Knot of The Heart, Brighton Rock, Big White Fog, The Lightning Play, Enemies, Blood
Wedding, Whistling Psyche (Almeida) and over twenty productions for the RSC, most
recently Morte D’Arthur, Twelfth Night, Love’s Labour’s Lost and Hamlet.
Richard Rodney Bennett was born 29 March 1936 in Broadstairs, Kent. He enrolled in the
Royal Academy of Music in 1953 and then went on to study in Paris in 1957 – 1959 with the
French Composer Pierre Boulez. Bennett wrote his first musical score for ballet in 1980 with
the ballet Isadora and then in 1981 he wrote the music for Noctuary, a ballet by Macmillian
yet to be performed.
Bennett later became well known for his film score which includes credits such as Far from
the Madding Crowd, Nicholas and Alexandra, Murder on the Orient Express and Four
Weddings and a Funeral. He also composed for the music to the 1964 Doctor Who
serial, The Aztecs. He was knighted in 1998 for his services to music.
Richard Rodney Bennett passed away in New York Christmas Eve 2012 after a short illness.
Born in Lancashire, John was educated at Girton College in Cambridge and then Guildhall
School of Music and Drama. He has worked as conductor and rehearsal pianist for Kiel
Opera House in Germany and Northern Ballet. He was Artistic Director at Sheffield
Symphony Orchestra, Opera Conductor at Leeds College of Music and Guest Conductor at
English National Ballet for their The Nutcracker and Giselle seasons. His work with National
Ballet has included Romeo & Juliet, Swan Lake, Giselle, Don Quixote, Carmen, Great
Expectations, Madame Butterfly, I Got Rhythm, Beauty & the Beast, A Midsummer Night’s
Dream, La Traviata, The Three Musketeers, The Nutcracker and Cleopatra. Other ballet
scores and arrangements include Dorian, La Sylphide, Eugene Onegin, Hansel and Gretel
(chamber versions) and The Coronation of Poppaea. Career highlights include winning
second prize at Leeds Conductors’ Competition; editing Handel’s Judas Maccabeaus in the
orchestration attributed to Mozart found in Halifax and televised on BBC 4; and producing
Northern Ballet’s CD’s of Great Expectations, A Streetcar Named Desire, Peter Pan and The
Three Musketeers. John also enjoys playing the organ for services at St. Peter’s in
Harrogate.
Anthony, who worked as music advisor on The Three Musketeers and The Great Gatsby,
has written biographies on both Malcolm Arnold and Richard Rodney Bennett. He has wide
interests in addition to music and dance.
His most recent books have included a selection of Richard Rodney Bennett’s piano works
(in the Composer Portraits series); the history of Lord’s Cricket Ground; and a motor racing
extravaganza,Silverstone’s First Grand Prix, 1948.
His daughter, Jo Meredith, is a choreographer and movement director.
Recently nominated for the Marie Taglioni European Award as ‘Best Conductor’, Myron
Romanul is one of the most fascinating and intriguing musicians on the music scene today.
His passion and enthusiasm for music has given him the ability to bring people from many
different types of arts and backgrounds together to produce spectacular performances that
have moved audiences as well as bring critical acclaim.
Born in Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A., he comes from a musical family and is the grandson of
Stella Roman, former leading dramatic soprano at La Scala and the Metropolitan Opera. He
began studying piano and memorising orchestral scores when he was six. He was featured
with the New England Conservatory Ragtime Ensemble on the Angel-EMI recording Scott
Joplin: The Red Back Book which won a Grammy Award for Best Classical Chamber Music.
He studied conducting at the New England Conservatory of Music, the Boston University
School of Music and the Berkshire Music Center at Tanglewood with Seiji Ozawa, Gunther
Schuller and Joseph Silverstein. His long association with the Boston Symphony Orchestra,
working with Ozawa, Kurt Mazur, Arthur Fiedler and John Williams, to mention a few, has
been a strong influence in his growth as a conductor. After conducting orchestras such as
the Central Massachusetts Symphony Orchestra, the Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra and the
Boston Ballet Orchestra, he moved to Germany where he has served as Kapellmeister,
Associate and Assistant Music Directors in various opera houses in Stuttgart, Karlsruhe,
Mainz and Essen. He has also guest conducted throughout Germany as well as orchestras
in North and South America, Europe and Asia. Romanul was a major force in the successful
Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival in Alaska with his creative 16-year run as Music/Artistic
Director. His recently released CD, The Piano Of The Opera has won critical acclaim.
He is currently conductor at the National Theater Munich, Germany, where since 1987 he
has been leading performances of the Bayern State Opera and Ballet. In addition, he is
Principal Conductor of the Massachusetts Symphony Orchestra and Guest Conductor at the
Opera national du rhin, France. He is also currently Artist in Residence at Wesley College.
His theatre and concerts experiences extend from opera, operetta, ballet, musicals to big
bands.